NBN says six-month rollout delay could postpone $500m in revenue

If all 1.9 million premises still to connect to the national broadband network on existing pay television or internet cables are pushed back by six months, it could delay $500 million in revenue, NBN Co chief financial officer Stephen Rue said.

"If all were delayed by six months - and I don't think that'll be the case - but if all were delayed, you'd be talking about a $500 million delay in revenue," Mr Rue told the Senate Joint Standing Committee on Friday.

"But that is hypothetical - if everything is delayed by six months."

As NBN would continue to build lead-ins and build into new areas while the delay in connecting new customers took place, this figure could be lower.

The specific final figure was "well and truly being worked through", he said, but indicated there would be a $50 million impact on the revenue by June 30.

NBN chief executive Bill Morrow said the company had a $2 billion contingency built into the $49 billion fund for building the NBN - meaning the net effect of the HFC delay on the business was zero.

The contingency fund was created to cover the "unknown" factors of the project.

"That's why when we do find things, like HFC that we just recently announced, it's not a problem for the overall budget - we're just now moving some of the contingency over," he said.

"It does not change the value of the company in terms of the profitability because ... the ongoing revenues will remain and the ongoing profits will remain."

While maintenance issues have always been on NBN's radar, including dealing with holes in the cables of the HFC network, the issues with the network had escalated over time, he said.

"We knew that there would be some level of remediation that was required. We did not anticipate that it would be this much remediation that was necessary, otherwise we would've done a far different job before we released it for the customers to connect to," he said.

"We have a plan that outlines how to get to cash-flow positive by only spending $47 billion. But we have uncertainties still that we know we face in front of us and when this plan was written in June of last year, we knew that we would be facing things that we didn't know."